‹ Florida Filing Guide · All Penalties
Operating in Florida without a certificate of authority can trigger a civil penalty under state statute and bar your LLC from Florida courts. Here's the full cost.
If you operate an LLC in Florida without a certificate of authority, you face a civil penalty of $500 to $1,000 for each year (or part of a year) you transacted business unregistered. You also owe all the back fees you would have paid if you'd registered on time. And you can't sue anyone in Florida courts until you register.
| What's at stake | If you don't register | Severity |
|---|---|---|
| Civil penalty | You owe $500 to $1,000 per year. The exact amount is set by the court within this statutory range, but you cannot avoid the penalty by registering after the fact. | High |
| Back fees on cure | You owe every fee and tax that would have been due if you had registered on time. That includes registration fees, annual report fees, and franchise tax for each year unregistered. | High |
| Right to sue in state court | Closed. You cannot bring or maintain any lawsuit in state court until you register. If you need to sue a customer, a partner, or a vendor, you have to register first. You can still defend yourself if someone sues you. | High |
| Contract validity | Your contracts stay enforceable. Failing to register does not void any deal you signed, and the other party still owes you what they agreed to. | Low |
| Personal liability | Your personal assets are still protected by the LLC. Failing to register does not by itself pierce the corporate veil. Other liability theories like veil-piercing, personal guarantees, and fraud are unaffected. | Low |
| State tax exposure | Possible. Florida has no state income tax for individuals, but LLCs doing business in Florida may have sales tax, reemployment tax, or corporate income tax obligations depending on activity. Verify with the Florida Department of Revenue. | Medium |
| How it gets enforced | Imposed by the court when an unregistered LLC tries to sue or is otherwise discovered. | N/A |
Here's how to fix it before any of this catches up to you.
You can file the foreign qualification yourself directly with the Florida Secretary of State for the standard filing fee. The application looks straightforward, but rejections are common. A wrong form version, a missing certificate of good standing from your home state, or a name conflict with an existing entity will bounce the filing and reset the clock by two to three weeks. Every week you stay unregistered is another week of penalty accrual.
Northwest reviews your application before it goes in, catches the rejection-causing mistakes (form version, name conflict, missing certificate of good standing), and submits same-day in most states. They'll also serve as your registered agent so the filing meets the statutory requirement on day one. If something is wrong, they fix it before the Secretary of State sees it, not after a rejection notice arrives three weeks later.
Get Northwest Registered Agent ↗Other options
Filing yourself anyway? See the Florida foreign LLC registration guide for the form, fee, and step-by-step process.
Answer 3 questions to find out if your LLC needs to register in other states.
See the form, fee, and step-by-step process for changing your registered agent in Florida.
Learn what counts as “doing business” and which activities trigger the foreign qualification requirement.
This page provides general information based on publicly available Florida statutes. It is not legal advice and is not a substitute for advice from a licensed attorney about a specific situation. Statutes change. Court interpretations vary by case. Verify current statute text with the Florida legislature before relying on the information here. If you are facing enforcement action or a pending lawsuit, consult a Florida business attorney.